Case Study 2.

The Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS), The International Centre for Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE), and Novozymes and Diversa (Verenium) Corporation: Agreements in the Industrial Biotech Sector

Key Players

Kenya Wildlife Service

Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) is an autonomous parastatal body supervised by a Board of Trustees with exclusive authority over national parks and significant influence over other categories of protected areas. The KWS was established under the Wildlife (Conservation and Management) Act of 1977 (and amended in 1989) (Lettington, 2003). KWS is charged with the protection and conservation of the country’s biodiversity, and its mission is “to sustainably conserve and manage Kenya’s wildlife and its habitat in collaboration with stakeholders for posterity”. It is part of the Ministry of Tourism and Wildlife, and to date has been the ABS focal point for collections made in Kenya’s 61 national parks and reserves (but not outside these areas), which include a number of Rift Valley soda lakes with microorganisms of interest to the biotech industry. KWS is also responsible for conducting and coordinating research activities in the field of wildlife and conservation management, as well as regulating research in protected areas, including vetting research proposals and issuing permits for research and for the export of any samples (KWS, 2006; Lettington, 2003). As such, they have directly entered into a number of agreements with outside partners, including Novozymes and Diversa. Other commercial partnerships are less public, including one for crop protection and another focused on insect venoms.

The International Centre for Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE)

ICIPE was established in Kenya in 1970 to “help alleviate poverty, ensure food security, and improve overall health of peoples of the tropics by developing and extending management tools and strategies for harmful and useful anthropods, while preserving the natural resource base through research and capacity building.” ICIPE has 233 regular staff members, drawn mainly from the developing world, and of these 45 professionals. Most staff are based at the headquarters in Nairobi (www.icipe.org). ICIPE partners with KWS for bioprospecting contracts, and this relationship is detailed in the “Memorandum of Agreement for Partnership in Discovery and Development of Products Identified from Kenyan Arthropods, Microorganisms, and Plants”. For academic agreements involving the transfer of material, ICIPE drafted in 2000 an “Agreement for the Transfer of Biological Material and/or Related Information” (www.wipo.int/tk/en/databases/summaries/icipe.html). ICIPE is also involved in commercial partnerships associated with its work on insects, including that with the venture capital company Bridgeworks, based in Switzerland. Bridgeworks Africa involves a partnership with ICIPE to develop botanicals, biopesticides and fertilizers, microbial pest control, and insect attractants, repellents and traps. The agreement affords Bridgeworks a “right of first refusal” on all new developments coming out of the research partnership, with benefit-sharing including royalties and technology transfer (www.bridgeworks.ch).

Novozymes

Novozymes is a biotech company based in Denmark, primarily owned by Novo A/S, a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Novo Nordisk Foundation. The company focuses on products that improve industrial performance and quality while saving water, energy, raw materials, and waste. Novozymes has around 4,500 employees, 15% of whom work in R&D, and over 700 products used in more than 40 different industries, and sold in 130 countries (www.novozymes.com). Novozymes’ annual sales in 2006 were DKK 6,802 million, with an operating profit of DKK 1,340 million, and net profit of DKK 911 million. The company makes a commitment to support the International Chamber of Commerce’s Charter for Sustainable Development, the Convention on Biological Diversity, the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the UN Global Compact (www.novozymes.com).

Novozymes spends 11-13% of sales on R&D focused on microbiology, biotechnology and gene technology. Their “core competencies” are genetic and biochemical diversity (culture collection, strain screening, genome sequencing, expression cloning); protein design; protein chemistry; pathway engineering; strain development and improvement; and large-scale production. They find, develop or refine enzymes and microorganisms into commercial products, and through ‘state-of’the’art’ biological production, produce them in large quantities for sale. Microorganisms are responsible for much of the building up and breaking down of different kinds of organic material in the environment, and Novozymes makes use of these capabilities for commercial products that clean surfaces and wastewater or improve the growth of plants. Microorganisms such as bacteria and fungi are also efficient and safe producers of enzymes that Novozymes sells for industrial applications (www.novozymes.com).

The company launches 5-8 new products a year, with development cycles for industrial or technical products – such as enzymes for biofuels and detergents – taking no more than 1-2 years from when a lead enzyme is identified, and for feed and feed products taking roughly 2-3 years, given the more involved approval procedures and requirements for toxicology (Ole Kirk, Novozymes, pers comm., 2007).

Novozymes has 2-3 partnerships with overseas research institutions running at any one time, including one previously with BIOTEC, Thailand for the collection of insect pathogenic fungi (Lange, 2004), and currently that with Kenya Wildlife Service and another in Portugal (Ole Kirk, pers comm., 2007).

Diversa (Verenium Corporation)

Verenium Corporation develops biofuels derived from low-cost abundant biomass and specialty enzyme products. Verenium, a publicly-traded company based in the US, was formed in 2007 through the merger of Diversa Corporation, which worked in enzyme technology, and Celunol Corporation, a developer of cellulosic ethanol process technologies and projects. The combination produced a company with “integrated end-to-end capabilities to make cellulosic biofuels a commercial reality” (www.verenium.com). Diversa signed an agreement with KWS and ICIPE in 2001, as part of collections to feed its research on enzymes that can be used in industrial processing. Examples of products in this area include Luminase PB-100 and Luminase PB-200, enzymes that enhance the process of pulp bleaching in the paper making industry while reducing the use of harsh bleaching chemicals (www.verenium.com). Luminase was developed from a microbe found in a thermal feature in Kamchatka as part of a partnership between Diversa and the Center for Ecological Research and BioResources Development (CERBRD) in Russia. Enzymes are also used in products to convert plant material into cellulosic ethanol for fuel, and in animal care, including to improve the nutritional value of feed (www.verenium.com). Diversa focuses on enzymes found in microorganisms, since they are the world’s most genetically diverse organisms, with broader and more varied characteristics than those observed in plants or animals. In 2005, Diversa had 18 partnerships with groups in 10 countries across six continents, and was collecting in all international waters around the world (Mathur et al, 2004; Diversa, 2005). But the 2007 merger of Diversa and Celunol into Verenium followed a restructuring at Diversa in 2006 that was intended to improve its product sales and to “conserve its dwindling cash pile” by reducing basic research, including bioprospecting partnerships (Sheridan, 2006).

The Kenya Wildlife Service – Novozymes Partnership

Background

In May 2007, The Kenya Wildlife Service and Novozymes entered into a five year partnership for the collection, identification, and characterization of microorganisms from Kenya’s national parks. The current agreement grew out of pre-CBD collections that Novozymes received, and their subsequent efforts to address the absence of an agreement associated with these collections after they led to the development of a commercial product, Pulpzyme. Pulpzyme reduces the amount of chlorine needed to bleach wood pulp (Odhiambo, 2007). It remains unclear who collected the samples, or where, and they may have been the result of a staff person collecting while on holiday, a practice common in the years prior to the CBD. Within the company’s database, however, the country of origin – Kenya - was clear. It was assumed that collections took place in a protected area, and thus under the management of KWS, so the company approached KWS to reach an agreement.

Commercial sales of Pulpzyme have been modest, but Novozymes sought to develop a benefit-sharing agreement for proceeds from this product in order to “make things straight… in the spirit of the CBD” (Ole Kirk, Novozymes, pers comm., 2007). A deal was negotiated to pay an accumulated royalty on past sales (the exact amount is not available), and running royalties on any future sales, as well as to build a new partnership around microorganism collection, identification, and characterization. Novozymes will train Kenyan students in taxonomy, isolation and identification of microorganisms, and will transfer advanced technology to Kenya, including knowledge of how to collect and isolate micro-organisms and how to characterize microbial diversity. The new agreement also grants Novozymes “rights on similar terms to commercially make use of specific strains isolated in Kenya which are already in Novozymes’ possession.” (Novozymes/KWS press release, 2007).

The partnership between Novozymes and KWS will run for five years as of 2007. Novozymes has found that with similar agreements in other countries, five years is a reasonable amount of time to allow for training and technology transfer to provider country institutions, and for Novozymes to fully evaluate the potential of the project, and the available biodiversity (Ole Kirk, pers. comm., 2007).

The 2007 Novozymes-KWS agreement did not result from a particular interest in bioprospecting partnerships in the region on the part of Novozymes, and instead resulted from commercialization of much earlier collections, and a desire to negotiate a benefit-sharing agreement. However, the microbial diversity available in Kenya is of interest to the company, which stands to benefits from access to novel genetic resources. It is the case, however, that the company is not as dependent upon collections from nature as it was even 10 years ago. Advances in science and technology, in particular genomic science, have made it possible to access the enormous biodiversity in Denmark alone, and most of their products derive from Danish biodiversity. The company also has access to increasing numbers of genomes placed in the public domain (on average, one new microbial genome is published a week), and they are able to generate ‘artificial evolution” and “diversity” in the laboratory (Ole Kirk, pers. comm., 2007).

Prior informed consent

Under the Wildlife and Conservation Management Act of 1972 (amended in 1989), KWS has jurisdiction over the management of Kenya’s 61 national parks and reserves, which form the core of the conservation system. KWS is responsible for regulating research in these areas, including vetting research proposals and issuing permits for research and for the export of any samples (KWS, 2006). National parks are central government property, and reserves are the property of communities, but KWS manages research in the latter areas, as well. Additional prior informed consent from local councils or communities for collections undertaken in reserves is not required.

While KWS serves as the national focal point for ABS in national parks and protected areas, these responsibilities, and their relationship to those of the National Environmental Management Authority (NEMA) of the Ministry of Environment and Natural Resources, have been unclear since new ABS regulations were propagated in December 2006. Prior to these new regulations - Legal Notice 160 “The Environmental Management and Coordination (Conservation of Biological Diversity and Resources, Access to Genetic Resources and Benefit-Sharing) Regulations, 2006”, under the Environmental Management and Coordination Act (No 8 of 1999) - there was no specific ABS regulatory regime in Kenya, although elements of a potential ABS regulatory structure were in place, and a range of statutory, regulatory and policy provisions affected access and benefit sharing (Lettington, 2003). In the new regulations section 53 directly addresses access to genetic resources. NEMA is identified as the national ABS focal point, but the relationship between this new role for NEMA, and KWS’ existing authority, remains unclear. Discussions are ongoing to address confusion about respective mandates and jurisdictions. At the same time, and typical to the establishment of national focal points around the world, NEMA is a new institution within government with a broad mandate and limited resources, so ABS must compete (often unsuccessfully) with other priorities (Lettington, 2003).

In the meantime, KWS continues to operate according to previous arrangements in which it grants access and receives benefits from ABS partnerships undertaken in protected areas. KWS undertakes to ensure that all necessary permits and authorizations are obtained for partner companies (Lettington, 2003). In the absence of clear ABS measures, procedures, and institutional authorities, many companies are reluctant to engage in ABS partnerships, however the KWS role as broker and facilitator appears to provide the certainty companies need. In the case of the Novozymes partnership, KWS facilitated all permits and signed the agreement with Novozymes. Directly partnering with companies in this way is somewhat unique for park managers, although one that has been widely proposed as a way of funding expensive and critical research and management activities in conserved areas.

Access to resources

KWS will undertake all collections, and these will be in Kenyan national parks and reserves. The collections do not involve traditional knowledge. Biotechnology research programs like these do not incorporate traditional knowledge into their collecting programs due to the emphasis on microorganisms, and because their research approaches and technologies do not lend themselves to incorporation of this type of information (Lange, 2004; Mathur, 2004). The numbers of samples to be collected per year are not specified in the agreement, and the intention is that this will evolve alongside the partnership in the coming years. In the microbial discovery laboratory set up by Novozymes, and staffed by KWS researchers trained by Novozymes, KWS will undertake isolation and characterization of microorganisms. They will supply research results to Novozymes, which will then decide whether to pursue a lead or not.

Benefit-sharing

Monetary benefits

Under the agreement, KWS – as a representative of the government – will receive running royalties on any commercial product developed. The rate is confidential (see discussion below in section on the Diversa partnership). Novozymes also provides KWS with an upfront payment, a ‘lump sum’ that covers the costs of sample collections and laboratory work. If research results from the microbial discovery laboratory in Kenya show promise, and Novozymes wishes to pursue something further, it will request samples for research within the company’s laboratories, and this will trigger a milestone payment to KWS.

Non-monetary benefits – technology transfer and capacity-building